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Religion
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Title: Why Are There No War Crimes Trials?
Source: http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/10/05/4344/
URL Source: http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/10/05/4344/
Published: Oct 7, 2007
Author: Common Dreams
Post Date: 2007-10-07 06:30:47 by Zoroaster
Keywords: None
Views: 184
Comments: 4

Discuss this story Print This Post E-Mail This Article Published on Friday, October 5, 2007 by the Chicago Sun-Times Why Are There No War Crimes Trials? by Andrew Greeley I’ve watched two episodes of Ken Burns’ “The War.” I don’t think I’ll watch any more. It was young men of my generation who fought those battles. The kids killed on Guadalcanal or storming Monte Cassino were only a couple years older than I was. Nor will I read the late David Halberstam’s book The Coldest Winter about Korea. My friends died in that winter cold. War is inherently ugly, destructive, horrible. The lives of young men are cut short. Parents, spouses, friends, children are marked for life by the losses they suffered. It is astonishing that despite the four wars of the last half century, we Americans do not remember the horror. Instead we blunder into new wars, blithely confident that it will be easy, short and almost bloodless. We are always mistaken. Perhaps we don’t want to remember.

The TV critic of the Wall Street Journal (a newspaper that never saw a war that it didn’t like including a possible war with Iran) says that Burns is wrong. Americans know that “The War” was horrible, she said. They’ve seen all about it on the History Channel. Yeah, everyone watches the History Channel, don’t they? If Americans remember how horrible the “good war” was, why do they continue to continue to support nutcase conflicts into which our leaders rush?

The only ones who remember how bad the “good war” was are those who fought in it or those who lived through it. It became real for me, a clueless 15-year-old, one night when I was praying in our local church. In semi-darkness, a young woman, maybe a half decade older than I, was kneeling in front of the gold star shrine, sobbing softly. Then she cried out in anguish, “Why didn’t you take me instead of him!”

Dismayed, I got out of the church as quickly as I could, leaving behind a prayer to God, “You take care of her, I can’t!” Since then I’ve often wondered what happened to that young woman — and to the other young women who have lost the men they loved. Were those deaths necessary?

There is no question that the war that Burns so brilliantly brings back was necessary. However, even in necessary wars, stupid and evil things happen. Not all the killing is necessary, but it is in the nature of war that evil is often done in the name of good and the innocent suffer without reason. Inept and publicity-hungry commanders like Mark Clark and Douglas MacArthur make terrible mistakes. Civilians are killed randomly and recklessly as in the RAF night raids on German cities. Individual human life is cheap. Angry soldiers kill prisoners. Pilots kill parachutists. Americans drop atomic bombs. Killing other human beings becomes routine.

Obviously there is a subtext to the TV series: If that war was the most terrible ever and yet was necessary, what about the subsequent wars and the present war? It is, I suspect, the reason that the Journal’s critic is so measured in her approval.

Why was it necessary to invade Iraq? Because they attacked us? But they did not. Most of the 9/11 killers were in fact Saudis. Because they had weapons that might kill us? It turns out that they did not. Why is it necessary to continue this pointless, never-ending war? For the sake of democracy in Iraq? For victory? Because the president says it’s the “right thing” to do? So that a future president will be blamed for “weakness?”

And I think of that young woman in St. Angela Church in 1943 and of similar young women today and wonder why we don’t have war crimes trials for unnecessary wars.

Andrew Greeley is a priest in good standing of the Archdiocese of Chicago for 52 years, a columnist for 40 years, a sociologist for 45 years, a novelist for 28 years, distinguished lecturer at the University of Arizona for 28, research associate at National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago for 46 years.


Poster Comment:

There are no war crimes trials because the United States government and the news networks are under Zionist control.

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#1. To: Zoroaster (#0)

Andrew Sullivan: 'We have war criminals in the White House. What are we going to do about it?'

"You can not save the Constitution by destroying it."

Itisa1mosttoolate  posted on  2007-10-07   6:41:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Itisa1mosttoolate, Zoroaster, *Mercenaries - War Profiteers* (#1)

Paul Bremer ruled mercenaries in Iraq could not be charged or tried.

Despite all the nonsense about a "liberated Iraq," one of Bush's favorite phrases, the Iraqis still lack the authority to prosecute American mercenaries occupying their country because of a law pushed through by former U.S. pro-consul L. Paul Bremer, who was also guarded by Blackwater personnel. Bremer awarded the original no-bid contract to a company run by a major Republican campaign contributor, Erik Prince, who has donated $225,000 to the GOP. Prince's sister, Betsy DeVos, was Michigan's Republican Party chair and a Bush-Cheney "pioneer" who came through with at least $100,000 for their 2004 campaign.

Ron Paul for President - Join a Ron Paul Meetup group today!

robin  posted on  2007-10-07   12:24:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Zoroaster (#0)

wonder why we don’t have war crimes trials for unnecessary wars.

He doesn't know?


I've already said too much.

MUDDOG  posted on  2007-10-07   17:29:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Zoroaster (#0) (Edited)

War is inherently ugly, destructive, horrible. The lives of young men are cut short. Parents, spouses, friends, children are marked for life by the losses they suffered. It is astonishing that despite the four wars of the last half century, we Americans do not remember the horror.

Good article. But I disagree with Greely about America's late entry in WWII as being "necessary." FDR's deceipt made it so. I hope that Stalinist war pig is roasting in Hell for his betrayal of America.

"Day of Deceipt: the truth about FDR and Pearl Harbor" by Robert Stinnett should be required reading in all US high schools - to give balance to the stereo typical US textbook reverie that is paid to FDR.

scrapper2  posted on  2007-10-07   17:42:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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